David Mayer de Rothschild

Birthday August 25, 1978

Birth Sign Virgo

Birthplace London, England

Age 45 years old

Nationality United Kingdom

Height 1.93 m

#18651 Most Popular

1978

David Mayer de Rothschild (born 25 August 1978) is a British adventurer, environmentalist, film producer, and heir to the Rothschild fortune.

He is a member of the Rothschild family, the youngest of three children of Victoria Lou Schott (1949 – 18 January 2021) and Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (1931–2022) of the Rothschild banking family of England.

His middle name "Mayer" is taken from the name of the founder of the Rothschild family banking empire, Mayer Amschel Rothschild.

The youngest heir to his family's banking fortune, Rothschild was born in 1978 in London, England.

His mother was American, the daughter of Marcia Lou (née Whitney) and real estate developer Lewis M. Schott.

He is the younger brother of Anthony de Rothschild and Jessica de Rothschild.

As a teenager, Rothschild was a top-ranked horse jumper on Britain's junior event team.

He later gave up the sport to pursue his education, stating in an interview with The New Yorker "I realized there was more to life than spending hours and hours and hours on a horse."

1996

After leaving Harrow School in 1996 he attended Oxford Brookes receiving a 2:1 B.Sc (Hons) in Political Science and Information Systems.

2000

In the late 2000s, Rothschild developed a mission to raise awareness of the Pacific Garbage Patch, in which he invented a new form of sustainable ship at a lab on Pier 31 in San Francisco, called the Plastiki.

2001

In 2001 he bought a 1,100 acre organic farm in New Zealand, and was invited to take part in a Polar expedition.

This experience turned Rothschild into an enterprising eco-adventurer.

2002

In 2002, Rothschild studied at the College of Naturopathic Medicine, London where he received an advanced Diploma in Natural Medicine, ND.

By age 20, Rothschild had started his own music merchandising business and sold it.

2006

In 2006, Rothschild spent over 100 days crossing the Arctic from Russia to Canada, which saw him become one of only 42 people, and the youngest British person, to ever reach both geographical poles.

He had already become one of only 14 people ever to traverse the continent of Antarctica, and was part of a team that broke the world record for the fastest ever crossing of the Greenland ice cap.

In 2006 he launched the website "Mission Control" in order to present his expeditions and environmental efforts to children and the youth.

The trek across the Arctic was the first "mission" to be highlighted on the website, and the second was planned to either be a trek through the Amazon or a trek from Lake Baikal to the Gobi Desert.

His expeditions also led to his founding of the Adventure Ecology organization.

It serves as a community and network for the discussion of climate change and associated problems.

2007

As part of Adventure Ecology's ARTiculate series, de Rothschild led a field trip expedition to the Ecuadorian Amazon in 2007.

The group spent time in the Ecuadorian rain forest, documenting the damage international oil companies had caused by drilling the vast oil reserves.

2009

In 2009, New Yorker correspondent John Colapinto wrote about the Plastiki, comparing its creator, Rothschild, to adventurers such as Sir Richard Francis Burton and Sebastian Snow.

2010

In March 2010, de Rothschild launched the boat, a 60 ft catamaran built from approximately 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles and a unique recyclable technology called Seretex.

Seretex, which was developed by de Rothschild and his team, was meant to reuse PET in a novel way, finding new uses for a waste product.

The Plastiki and its crew sailed over 8000 nmi across the Pacific Ocean from San Francisco to Sydney.

The evening before their journey began, Rothschild and his skipper Jo Royle interviewed with CNN, quoting Mark Twain when asked how he felt in anticipation for the trip.

The Plastiki successfully completed its journey to Sydney on 26 July 2010.

Along with the Plastiki, Rothschild launched a platform for community interaction and sharing stories called "Myoo" (the name comes from the pronunciation of "community").

The Plastiki was named one of 2010's fifty best inventions by Time magazine.

The Plastiki is named after the Kon-Tiki, a raft used by Pacific explorer Thor Heyerdahl.

The construction of the ship is notable not only for its use of recycled plastic bottles as a primary building material, but also for using reclaimed and environmentally friendly materials throughout.

In April 2010, Mayer told Good Morning America: "Every part of the boat, even down to the glue we used to stick the boat together, [it] is a glue we made and had to engineer specifically for this project. It's made of cashew nuts and sugar....every part of the boat – from the interior with reclaimed materials, reclaimed fabric, is all trying to do our best and showcasing there are a lot of solutions out there."

2011

In November 2011, de Rothschild and a small crew mounted an expedition to Brazil's Amazon rainforest as part of the ARTiculate series, with the goal of better understanding and publicizing the effects of the controversial Belo Monte dam project.

This expedition was supplemented by articles on Myoo.com and culminated in an art project developed with local children.

When asked by Outside Magazine reporter Caty Enders about whether an expedition could make a difference in a pressing issue like the Belo Monte dam de Rothschild replied that "it would be naïve to think that this mini art-based adventure into the Amazon is going to change what has been in motion for the last 36 years. But when you see someone in the road and they're dying, do you keep walking and say, Oh, they'll be dead soon? That's the reality when you embark on an adventure like this, you may never know the true outcome until many years later".

The Myoo concept developed into the Myoo Agency, founded by de Rothschild as a marketing agency that works with businesses looking to create sustainable practices.

The Plastiki development was done under the company name Smarter Plan, which continues to develop additional solutions for adapting waste into useful objects and devices.

Myoo was eventually renamed the World-Exposure agency, reflecting his new partnership with the Exposure marketing agency.

It carries on the task of introducing firms to sustainable practices and promoting communications strategies involving sustainable means and profiling sustainable enterprises.